Monday 29 December 2014

Why Copy Failure?

Almost lost in the avalanche of miserable health lobbying over Christmas was yet another plea from state-funded prohibitionists for a ban on alcohol sponsorship of sport.

A letter packed full of seasonal, ahem, joy from the usual temperance tax spongers was published in the Guardian (where else?) on Christmas Day.
Our children deserve a better future and we must take the opportunity to give it to them. Self-regulation of alcohol advertising isn’t working when it allows drink brands to dominate sporting events that attract children as well as adults, creating automatic associations between alcohol brands and sport that are cumulative, unconscious and built up over years. Evidence shows that exposure to alcohol advertising leads young people to drink more, and to drink at an earlier age.
Funny that. You see, over in France alcohol advertising is, indeed, banned under the wide-ranging Loi Evin. And what is happening there?
Between 2007 and 2011 (two years before and two years after the ban), there were modest increases in regular drinking (“usage regulier”), drunkenness (“ivresse”), binge drinking (“alcoolisation ponctuelle importante”) and daily smoking (“usage quotidian”) among 16-year-olds. 
That rise in consumption was even more pronounced for 17-year-olds in the period between 2008 and 2011
Le Loi Evin isn't working well for French adults either.
France has seen a sharp rise in the number of people being hospitalised for alcohol-related conditions. 
Around 400,000 people out of a population of 65 million are admitted to French hospitals every year for conditions like comas, hepatitis and liver cirrhosis, a rise of 30 per cent compared with three years ago.
 
In addition, short term hospital admissions for binge drinking symptoms are up by a staggering 80per cent.
Contrast that with the UK - where alcohol sponsorship is legal - and you have to wonder what is really motivating these 'public health' trouser-stuffers.
In 2013, around two-fifths of pupils (39%) had drunk alcohol at least once. Boys and girls were equally likely to have done so. The proportion of pupils who have had an alcoholic drink increased with age from 6% of 11 year olds to 72% of 15 year olds. Less than one in ten pupils (9%) had drunk alcohol in the last week. This continues the downward trend since 2003, when a quarter (25%) of pupils had drunk alcohol in the last week.
Yes, even more of a decline since the previous year when it looked like this.


So, underage drinking is on a continual downward trend and at the lowest it has been for over a decade in the UK where alcohol sponsorship is allowed, but on the rise in France where alcohol advertising in sport is strictly banned. You'd think the 'public health' lobby - who love to point at 'evidence' from other countries and demand we copy them - would be less gung-ho about copying failure, wouldn't you?

Call me cynical, but perhaps with the public sector being squeezed for cash, there isn't much scope for grant funds by saying all is well, now is there?


3 comments:

truckerlyn said...

You forget, Dick, that here, the temperance movement, just like the tobacco lot, are able to 'buy' the results they want!


Just look at the supposed reduction in smoking since their 'glorious' ban! It is as flawed as they are! Let's face it, most of us, at a push, could quit for a month if we had to or wanted to. The NHS Quit service is that fantastic that they have almost 100% success - of people stopping for a month! Just how many of those stay non smokers? Less than a quarter, I would think.


Their rationale seems to be, get them in, get them stopped for a month and they will then stop for good, so that is another tick in success box!


On a cheerier note, I wish you and yours a Very Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year.

Michael J. McFadden said...

"So, underage drinking is on a continual downward trend and at the lowest it has been for over a decade in the UK where alcohol sponsorship is allowed, but on the rise in France where alcohol advertising in sport is strictly banned."


You're being FAR too rational Dick. The numbers don't matter unless they say the "correct" thing. Otherwise it's just "the principle that counts"!


There have been times over the years when I've tried to "make a point" by proposing bans on alcohol sales/ads and sports -- usually pointing out that "Adult sports fans will happily pay double or triple the prices for their tickets or make small sacrifices like having their SuperBowls and World Series and such on by-yearly rather than annual schedules" in order to save the children.


I had no idea anyone had yet begun to push the concept seriously.


:>
MJM

Q46 said...

Yet nearly all the population thinks the Nanny State should provide, run and pay for their healthcare, no matter how many thousand it slaughters, lets die or fails to treat, and keep them ignorant of exactly how much each pays for it by financing it from taking sippits from a plethora of direct and indirect taxation and public debt... the all hallowed, all saintly, all worshipped NHS.

Which tells us all we need to know about Britons and their opinions.